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What made google to post sundar pichai, an indian as the CEO?

WHAT MADE GOOGLE TO POST SUNDAR PICHAI, AN INDIAN AS THE CEO? Google today announced a major restructuring of the company, naming for...

WHAT MADE GOOGLE TO POST SUNDAR PICHAI, AN INDIAN AS THE CEO?

Google today announced a major restructuring of the company, naming former Product ChiefSundar Pichai as the new CEO and becoming a subsidiary of a newly-formed parent enterprise called Alphabet.

The move made Pichai, 43, yet another India-born officer to lead a major global technology corporation after Microsoft's Satya

According to a blog post by co-founder Larry Page, Google will now become a "slimmed-down" company and be part of Alphabet Inc. along with ventures "far afield of our main internet products".

"Good examples are our health efforts: Life Sciences (that works on the glucose-sensing contact lens), and Calico (focused on longevity)" Mr Page said.

He said the move would make Google "cleaner and more accountable". Alphabet, meanwhile, will be run by Mr Page as CEO and Google co-founder Sergey Brin as President.

For Chennai-born Sundar Pichai, becoming CEO comes 11 years after he joined Google following a stint at management consultancy McKinsey and Company.

At Google, he started out with heading products such as the company's new web browser Chrome and later most of Google's consumer software portfolio including the Android operating system.

Mr Pichai is alumnus of IIT Kharagpur, Stanford University and The Wharton School. He will be a "key part" of the new structure that will "allow us to keep tremendous focus on the extraordinary opportunities we have inside Google", Mr Page said.

"I feel very fortunate to have someone as talented as he is to run the slightly slimmed down Google and this frees up time for me to continue to scale our aspirations," he said.

Reiterating a line from a founders' letter 11 years ago, Mr Page who started the company with his partner Sergey Brin as a research project at Stanford, said, "Google is not a conventional company. We do not intend to become one."